Communism in China is really not anything like the ideals of communism. It created a way to change the mindset of the proletarian population, flipping the positions of power. It also created much chaos, anger, and destruction of social norms, making China dependent on other forms of government. This gave the Red Guards along with Chairman Mao a chance to assume complete control, taking advantage of the chaotic situation.
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Hidden Agenda
During the rise of Communism in China, the ideas and rhetoric that sounded beneficial to the country held a hidden agenda that created a corrupt society. Communism's ideals of trying to create complete equality do not appear to be bad. However, in practice, the rules and regulations lead to a mob like mentality that caused chaos and a reversal of power, rather than equality. For example, the first excerpt clearly shows the reversal of power. Instead of treating everyone equally, there is a complete switch, in which the peasants and government are abusing the former people who held power. Although the communists say they are just trying to enforce equality and redistribute land, they are in fact creating an extreme imbalance of power in which one group holds complete control over the other. The excerpt on page 769 also demonstrated the destruction of lives that happened through the rise of the Red Guards. The Red Guards had a mob mentality - acting impulsively and taking the law into their own hands. The excerpt reminded me of The Red Scarf Girl, a novel that I read in 8th grade. In this book, a girl grows up through the time of the cultural revolution in China. As the Red Guards gain more and more power, a sense of fear is instilled in the society.
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